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    clayv
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    "Welcome to the 10th year of the Dave's Picks series! We're amazed and humbled that this community of Dave's Picks fans keeps growing, and we just wanted to let you know how much we sincerely appreciate your support of and interest in the series. We started in 2012 with 12,000 of each release, and now we've more doubled that, with 25,000 in 2021. Wow! We keep working as hard as we possibly can to bring you the best, most exciting Grateful Dead shows in the vault. Our 2020 releases included music from 1977, 1974, 1984, and the latest, biggest release yet in the series, the two complete Hartford shows from 1987. Looking ahead, we've selected two exceptional, A+ Dead shows for Vol. 37 (more on that in the video below) and 38, as well as the Bonus Disc that will come with Vol. 38. Big year ahead! As we head into the 10th year of the series, there's no end in sight. We love what we do, and have loads of plans and ideas for the next few years. Onward to more great music!"

    David Lemieux
    October 2020

    Times may be trying but the music has never and will never stop! Keep the momentum going by doing the Dead all year long with a Dave's Picks 2021 subscription. We're taking the production run up one final time - to 25,000 - for each of the four Dave's Picks 2021 releases. We'll also be doing things a wee bit differently this year - subscribers will be the first to receive their Dave's Picks. A la carte sales will go up on street date (no more pre-orders) and if you don't subscribe - we highly encourage you to - you'll want to be ready and waiting because these releases sell out within hours. Hours - no hyperbole.

    In addition to the four releases in 2021, totaling 12 CDs, you’ll also get the subscription exclusive bonus disc, which has proven to be one of the most highly sought-after collectables we release, and free domestic shipping. Subscriber bonus discs will not be released outside of this offer. Early bird subscribers can nab a sub at $99.98 (regular pricing will be $115.92).

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  • hendrixfreak
    Joined:
    Need-a-new-release syndrome...

    If I recall correctly, the apogee of this syndrome occurred perhaps 5 years ago when the discussion veered toward whether to let the mashed potatoes touch the pork chops as one chowed down on dinner.

    Blew my mind. Yet, I'm still undecided on that point....

    Next up: the DaP 38 reveal, sometime in December, which starts Tuesday. I'm all ears. And looking forward to that flamethrower discussion... if we have weeks to go to word on DaP 38, I'm all flamethrower all the time.

    Whatever that means.

  • JimInMD
    Joined:
    Guitars Hand Grenades and Grateful Dead

    It's all about the aim, Oroborous.. When used properly and with good aim, hand grenades will cause no harm to the vermin that annoy you and will usually convince them to relocate to a different part of the county. The same can be said about deft usage of a high quality, accurate flamethrower (which gets considerably harder when the mice make it indoors..) perhaps a topic for another day perhaps.

    I knew you techies would have more to say on tone and style over the years. Interesting discussion, many thanks.

    A little more on the modifications made on the Nash Strat over the years.. the first guitar Jerry began to heavily modify.

    https://www.guitarworld.com/news/jerry-garcias-alligator-fender-strat-i….

    When vermin control takes center stage.. yes, we need a new release.. (or at least word of what the new release is going to be)

  • hendrixfreak
    Joined:
    I think I inadvertently dropped a grenade...

    Okay, a couple comments. Yes, Oroborous, the flip side of getting different sounds with different guitars is the way a player can sound like him or herself on different axes. True and good point.

    Um, Keef has 500 effin' guitars?! Okay, that's just ONE TOO MANY.... 499? Okay. But 500?? That's just over the top! (Confession: I have three useful acoustics; my fav is a Martin D-35. I have five electrics and have been playing the '64 Gretsch 6120 hollowbody a lot lately, and the aforementioned SG in open D.)

    Lastly, LedDed, I too -- if forced -- would pick Jer's Nash Strat on the Euro tour as my favorite sound, but you're right, one can't separate the Strat from the peak music and improvisation.

    I do own an American SG and an American Strat and love playing both (if crudely). I'd say, the Fender needs more power to achieve its signature tone, while the SG kinda needs to be restrained. The SG was more expensive and I feel the components are of higher quality. To me, the SG stays in tune better. I can tune from standard to, say, open D, on the SG for some fingerpicking and the SG holds the tuning more accurately than the Strat.

    Of course, Jer's choice of instrument -- as someone pointed out -- also must be evaluated/enjoyed in relation to the instrument choices of the rest of the band, particularly Bobby. And yes, I liked Bob's ES335 tone best in the Euro setting. Gawd, what a tour! Maybe time for another full show from that insane run. I still marvel that me and two pals took 2 1/2 years to work through that 22-show box. Some of those four-disc shows required sleep-overs, though I do recall a few moderately perilous drives home after a 3 1/2 hour Euro show.

    Good stuff. What's next? Oh yeah, DaP 38 (big '73 show) and that 2021 fall '72 box! (I need to get out and socialize, obviously....).

  • daverock
    Joined:
    Guitars

    I wonder if Jerry changed guitars at all during individual sets? He doesn't seem to have done, although as I write this, I do have a distant memory of him changing to a strat for Space in one of the late period dvds - maybe in the View From the Vaults series.

    I agree that Bob's guitar playing sounded much stronger when he was playing the Gibsons. Watching that Egypt show, one of the factors I am not so keen on is his sound. It looks as though he is playing an Ibanez. The sound is quite cheap and tinny. And if that wasnt bad enough, he also plays lot of slide on it.

    Imagine what Jerry could have done with a guitar like the one pictured to the left of this message. Big River etc could have really shone.

  • Oroborous
    Joined:
    UJB playing to the times

    LD, I agree with much of your post Sir, but feel I must respectfully disagree and provide rebuttal about the slanderous over generalization about JGs diminishing skills, sloppiness, and laziness in the eighties.
    I will fully agree that his personal issues and overindulgences could negatively impact his proficiency at times.
    But I believe he, like most that play that much for that long, continued to grow in versatility, ability, and knowledge.
    Yes the overall arrangements and cohesiveness of songs was affected due to lack of band rehearsal, they’ve all admitted to that, and yes this could be attributed to him, and yes he unarguably had occasions of terribleness, but even during his worst times he always had a guitar with him...name a era and his M.O. was always a tv, a guitar, a pack of smokes, and yes sometimes other more destructive things. But he always kept playing! His supposed only complaint about E72 was they didn’t play enough. He always played as much as possible, and when you did get the real deal I argue he was continually evolving.
    As far as gizmos and distortions;
    1) he always loved that sort of thing, there just was way less reliable stuff back then, and
    2) they always played to the times!
    Whether consciously or not, from sixties psychedelic, to early 70s “country” rock, disco, to yes, harder rock, they always tastefully reflected the times without selling out or over doing what was en Vogue. So I think his use of such was for these reasons rather than being “lazy and sloppy“.
    Personally, I argue they OVERALL became a more professional, including lights and sound, band. There were times in the seventies when they'd tune before almost every song, for longer then the song, and still be outta tune. That didn't happen much later on. They’d tune less often and in less time.
    Certainly everyone has preferences and is entitled to their opinions, I’ve just never liked generalizations, either pro or negative. No offense, for the sake of conversation just contesting that point.
    Peace!

  • LedDed
    Joined:
    Close Encounters

    Remember, close only counts in horseshoes and hand grenades.

    Chiming in on Jer's ever changing stable of axes, the best playing I ever hear out of him is on Europe 72. The whole tour, with Bickershaw Festival being to me the all-time high water mark for both he and the band. That cream colored Strat originally gifted him by Graham Nash is my all time favourite Jerry sound. But it goes hand in hand with his playing; he was then at the very height of his powers.

    Gibsons, to me, sound fuller and thicker than Fenders due to their humbucking pickups (sometimes P90's) which tend to be less trebly. The stock single coil bridge pickup on a Stratocaster will slice your head clean off. It's a nearly useless sound... got to at least get into one of the clucky positions between bridge and mid, or neck for a little more warmth. Unless of course you're playing surf guitar or country twang.

    Gibsons also generally prefer heavier strings, .010's at least due to their shorter scale length, whereas your typical Strat-style is usually set up for .009's. This is the gauge of the thinnest, high E-string for the uninitiated. The heavier strings also stay in tune better, along with the hardtail or stop-tailpiece/bridge on a Gibson. Fenders tend to be harder to keep in tune particularly if one uses the original tremolo bar mechanism (just listen to Hendrix live). Unless your name is Jeff Beck or David Gilmour, and you are a tone magician of the highest order.

    There are exceptions... Stevie Ray Vaughan played with very heavy strings on his Strats, got a fat tone and generally stayed in tune. Stretching your strings is also one of the most important things in keeping an axe in tune throughout the rigors of a live set.

    Jerry began putting a lot more gizmos into his signal path as time went on and his skills diminished, as well. He began to hide his sloppiness and lazy playing behind a wall of distortion and effects throughout the later 1980s and especially into the 1990s. Hell, Brent even began taking solos that used to be the exclusive territory of one Jerome John Garcia.

    I still love all the music, and I enjoy Jerry in his later years, but nothing tops the man on fire around E72 era for both tone and technique. I also like Bob backing him on on the ES335 before he went all trebly and transparent, a sound that he maintains to this day.

    \m/

  • Oroborous
    Joined:
    Guitars and Cadillacs and hippie music...

    Sorry Dwight lol.
    HF your both correct and not...
    What you said is true, but I’d argue that an instrument pared with the right player can plug into any rig and do there thing! Conversely, much of the sound/tone that we dissect is due to the technology. Like can you imagine what JG would of sounded like on Live Dead plugging that SG into his 1990 rig? And to those that hate the midi etc, do you really think they wouldn’t have used the technology in 1969 if it was available? So it’s a complicated interesting thing.
    I do like the biting sound of the SG in JGs hands, but it’s often too thin sounding to me via others use. That was another of his great qualities; getting awesome tone and finding ways to make what ever axe he was using sound better than the same one used by others.
    My only problem with the Gibson’s etc, was they were out of tune too much. Just like some folks can’t take his vocals after “x” (critics can fill in their date) It’s hard for me to listen to out of tune guitars and vocals. Now I’m not talking the occasional instance, but when I notice enough instances during a particular show that it colors my recollections it. Unfortunately, this is why I dont dig 70-71 as much as most. Great set lists, ultimate creative period, amazing versatility (acoustic, pedal steel, and electric all in one night...foe git about it!) but sorry to be a bummer but a lot of that era is outta a tune! The vocals are more noticeable on 2 trac only, as multitrack allows later manipulation and blending; just listen to the awesome new Capital theater releases! I wonder if they’ve used a touch of auto tune to clean em up too?

    Eventually, the advent of the electric tuner would help, but if instruments don’t stay in tune while your playing.....
    This was one of the big reasons Bob and Phil started using Modulus Graphite instruments; The carbon fiber wasn’t as susceptible to extreme temperature shifts etc so they stayed in better tune.
    So it’s a the ole yin yang again; you love the era but have trouble with the tuning etc, or you love the more professionalism, sound, and effects, (and yes I think they got way more professional as years went by) but you don’t dig the R&R Cocaine train energy etc....that’s our boys, never perfect, but always great! Lol
    Speaking of the Bean, I believe it’s more the equipment that your referring too as the purpose of the Bean with its metal neck was to facilitate huge sustain (density of wood does so too, but not as much as metal!) Reverb wouldn’t be a characteristic of an instrument but a product of a reverb unit or setting on the Fender Twin Reverb and ultimately the room. Both kinds would be affected somewhat by recording techniques.
    My understanding of the main reason he used the Beans was to supposedly have more reliability on the road. Not being fully customized you’d be able to carry replacement parts could be easily swapped out on the road, where as the Irwin would have to go to the shop. I don’t dig the Bean as much as I used to, but again, if you plugged it into later years it probably would not have the same issues...
    All that being said, I like the Tiger best! I loved the Wolf, but the Strat has really grown on me over the years, again more because of the hands it was in than it being a Fender. Totally dig the Gibson’s for the more hard rock 60s psychedelic sound, and with the extra distortion you don’t notice when outta tune as much, but as I say it’s hit or miss for me later on, but that’s just me...
    Didn’t dig his later years sound as much but that’s more a product of the tech involved than the instruments.
    I thought contrary to the company line that when they stopped using actual speakers on stage and ran direct even with the speaker simulators it didn’t sound right. I understand totally why they did it, and it did help to address those concerns, but I think it lost some of the naturalism and that perfect R&R blend of clean and dirty etc, but agin, that’s just me....I thought they started getting too convoluted near the end and sounded too plastic? or clean and not enough like a R&R band. I know this is why Doc and others love 71 so much. That hard slightly dirty, not so techie R&R sound that became too clean for some. The sound of a bar band pushing the timeless simple set up of a good tube amp slightly overdriven! Like the sound that sucked me in: Johnny B Goode from Skullfuck! Tasty !
    But my favorite everything GD wise will always be 89-90 because of the versatility to be able to get the whole sonic spectrum, but again, that’s just me...(Interestingly, JGs core infrastructure, unlike Phil and more so Bob, didn’t change that much after he started using the Twin/MC 2300/ JBL E120 set up, just the effects etc changed)
    Ultimately, the truest form of greatness is the ability to plug into anything, and immediately be recognizable because of the signature uniqueness, tone and style!
    JG of course, Hendrix, Page (usually), Clapton (usaully), Santana, Miles, hell even the edge and Slash. You can tell the great ones instantly!
    Lol, ok, sorry, too much coffee and nothing to do here too!

  • Oroborous
    Joined:
    Advice and Vermin

    Uncle Sammy is both humorous and right on about vacuuming being best, but I’m curious if you have a special device? I’ve only tried my household vac with the smallest attachment, which helps, but doesn't really do the job. That’s where I find using the air to blow out the hard to get stuff in conjunction with vacuuming is best, but I need to investigate some sort of small precision vacuum?

    CONEKID: wonder what kind of range it has? I need something like that for prairie dogs, moles and field mice, not to be mistaken with Mayor Field!
    I was looking into water guns but was disappointed by the inherent idiosyncrasies of most, and that the one that would of worked is no longer available except on the black market for too much...
    I don’t want to kill em for various reasons, but I’ve read that if you make them not welcome they will retreat a bit which is all I’m looking for: “damn kids, get off my lawn!”
    I need something quick; as the enemy is lightning fast!, versatile, most importantly accurate with enough range and power to get the job done but not so much I’m killing them? Currently I try and hose em but their so damn quick and smart that I don’t often get a good shot...“Remember, to kill the gofer you have to be the gofer!”

  • daverock
    Joined:
    Gibson SG

    That is my favourite Jerry Garcia tone-the one recorded on Live Dead. It seemed quite a popular choice on the West Coast in the late 60s-incredible tones on the same instrument by Barry Melton, and especially John Cippolina..
    The other ingredient in defining sound is the player, of course.
    One of the interesting things about watching a post 1989 Stones show is how often Keith Richards changes guitar within one set. He typically plays various telecasters-some in open G with only 5 strings, to Gibson 335s, to Les Paul Juniors to strats. I think he's got about 500 at home.

  • JimInMD
    Joined:
    Ok

    The SG is in, I had to sleep on this one.

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"Welcome to the 10th year of the Dave's Picks series! We're amazed and humbled that this community of Dave's Picks fans keeps growing, and we just wanted to let you know how much we sincerely appreciate your support of and interest in the series. We started in 2012 with 12,000 of each release, and now we've more doubled that, with 25,000 in 2021. Wow! We keep working as hard as we possibly can to bring you the best, most exciting Grateful Dead shows in the vault. Our 2020 releases included music from 1977, 1974, 1984, and the latest, biggest release yet in the series, the two complete Hartford shows from 1987. Looking ahead, we've selected two exceptional, A+ Dead shows for Vol. 37 (more on that in the video below) and 38, as well as the Bonus Disc that will come with Vol. 38. Big year ahead! As we head into the 10th year of the series, there's no end in sight. We love what we do, and have loads of plans and ideas for the next few years. Onward to more great music!"

David Lemieux
October 2020

Times may be trying but the music has never and will never stop! Keep the momentum going by doing the Dead all year long with a Dave's Picks 2021 subscription. We're taking the production run up one final time - to 25,000 - for each of the four Dave's Picks 2021 releases. We'll also be doing things a wee bit differently this year - subscribers will be the first to receive their Dave's Picks. A la carte sales will go up on street date (no more pre-orders) and if you don't subscribe - we highly encourage you to - you'll want to be ready and waiting because these releases sell out within hours. Hours - no hyperbole.

In addition to the four releases in 2021, totaling 12 CDs, you’ll also get the subscription exclusive bonus disc, which has proven to be one of the most highly sought-after collectables we release, and free domestic shipping. Subscriber bonus discs will not be released outside of this offer. Early bird subscribers can nab a sub at $99.98 (regular pricing will be $115.92).

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We tuned, we watched, we said "Meh".

I'm the first to admit I'm not much of a video man, but really? I found it did nothing but distract from the music. Where the devil and chained humans came from IDK? The spider?

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It might make for a nice t-shirt or temporary tattoo.

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In reply to by bigbrownie

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Also had St. Stephen with a rose.
I think that most of the images were taken from tarot cards.

But yeah, added nothing to the song.

Why not give us the gift of a free download?
Oh yeah, they just gave 30 free song downloads with 30 Days of Dead. Thanks for those songs.

.... just wasn't sure where the little bastard came into the song. Not what I picture when I hear about a ripple with no pebble tossed! "Ohhhhh, look at the ripple. I ain't tossed no pebble, must have been a spider!"

So what did cause that Ripple?

....yes the spider would make a great tee!

Looking forward to hearing what will be released next year and when.

In going through all the past box set releases, there remains a glarring hole, 1980. We did get the unfortunate news from DL this year that several of the multi track reels of the Warfield/Radio City run were recorded over for Brent's solo stuff 😭 and they didn't have enough full shows for a box release... So, how about the five shows to end the year in December at Oakland?? Looks like this had potential to be a good run and that 1980 hole needs to be filled.

Stay well out there.

Is really one of the statement mind bending releases of all time. ...and recorded in glorious, if not flawed multi-track. The band thought it was junk for years until Don Pearson figured out how to time the PA from the various mics and somehow cross fade or erase the overage and bleeding and create what I think is a masterpiece.

I believe all this is mentioned in the liner notes from the original release, but I have not read them in decades, so rest assured my description above is at least slightly off.

Simply, a work of art.

Did somebody mention 1968?

As for Alaska.. love it but we have yet to see a cassette mastered box set. Time will tell, but I don't see Dave blowing his box set load on a cassette mastered series of shows just yet.. '

But who am I to predict the future.

But seriously, love Anchorage 1980. Look at my comments as keeping the vibe alive.

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In reply to by JimInMD

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the recordings in the vault from 68 are probably few and far between, and not up to release-able standards. Although MY release-able standards are pretty liberal (that is not a political statement, btw.)

11/1/68: I have 45 minutes of this on cassette, and listened to it the other day in the car.

HOT.

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Maybe? I don’t know. But AFAIK, the only other spider in GD iconography is the one that appeared on the Two from the Vault back cover. I suppose the idea was that the “vault” was full of cobwebs and spiders.

What the spider has to do with Ripple, I have no idea. Seems to me kind of contrary to the spirit of the song. I know there’s no one clear answer to the question of what this or any GD song is “about,” but I always felt like Ripple has something to do with the idea of (how can I put this?) not knowing. About living life knowing that we can’t know, and being OK with that. It’s about forces in the universe beyond what humans understand: the “fountain that was not made by hands of men” and the “ripple in still water where there is no pebble tossed,” not knowing or caring where songs come from, not having anyone to guide you, not knowing the way home.

So now here’s this cartoon that seems to want to just give you a pat answer: the reason there’s a ripple in still water is not because there are cosmic forces beyond our understanding, but because there’s a spider. Duh!

I didn’t like the video, partly for that reason. Instead of a lovely, mysterious haiku at the center of the song, we now have a cartoon spider that’s going to be hard to purge from the mind’s eye whenever we hear the song. Whole generations will grow up thinking Ripple is “that song about a spider.” Also, the whole damn video’s just kind of creepy. I mean, the skeleton playing cards is fine, because it’s the GD. But the women (and men) in the video have naked breasts, but no nipples, and nipless boobs just make me uneasy. And then there’s the Giant Satan. Really? In Ripple, that nice little campfire song, we get a Giant Satan? What are we, Slayer?

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I know damn well (even if I really don't) that they've got release-able '68 shows in the vault. ForensicDoc and I agree that many of those period shows were multi-band nights, thus the GD sometimes had to lift the roof in 90 minutes or less. It's a theory at least. But that means probably not a Dave's Pick unless you stack a couple together.

But for the record, I'll take any reasonably well-recorded '68 shows in a heartbeat.

There, said it! Mean it! Gonna scream until they do it!

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This show is just waiting to be cleaned up.and released, it. burns.

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In reply to by hendrixfreak

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"well, please don't be surprised when you find me screamin', too"

68! 68! 68!

Attention all intelligent lifeforms...today is the anniversary of that awesome show in Florida: 12/18/73.

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In reply to by hendrixfreak

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I would be quite happy with a single disc Dave's Picks from 1968 - on its own. Sometimes less is more, and one disc from that year would tickle my fancy more than 3 or 4 discs from a lesser year. Of which there are many!

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their forks and spoons on the stainless steel tables and chanting "68" "68" instead of, say, "69" "69" (pun intended) I start to feel right at home. I do have my favorite eras and band configurations, as do many of you, but I think we all could really enjoy even a one-disc set packed with explosive double drummer mutant Alligator > Caution >Feedback with maybe a DS > St Stephen > Eleven thrown in for good measure.

What? I already own 5-6 hours of official '68?? Then what the hell am I doing hanging around here??

I believe it'll be a '68 weekend, with some Jer, Dylan and Jimi thrown in.

As you were!!!!!!!!!!!!

Hey.. it's called work release folks. And for the record, when we are out 'working' we are not inmates at all, we are functioning members of a productive society.

Did someone mention 1968? Well.. that's worth digging a tunnel under the vault. We need more 1968 Fully Normanized shows released.. Get your hands out of your pockets and bring on some one disc wonders from the most explosive year in Grateful Dead history..

1968, screw Cornell.. give us more 1968.

Blasphemy? Na.. a single disc 1968 in 2021. Have we not suffered enough?

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only in my mind, Mr. MD, thanks for pointing that out. Although I DO love that lunchtime in prison by Hollywood vibe. Call me sentimental. I will free my mind and soul by .... oh wait, I've already posted that.

Folks, using the word "happy" seems inappropriate at year's end of a tough one. In a moment of weakness, I would like to wish everyone stays safe, has someone close, makes or plays or cranks great music and finds a few moments of peace in that traditional lull between the Solstice or your chosen religious holiday and that first bleak day of January. For years my buddies and I have jammed on both the Solstice and New Years Day, because we could. The band is the audience, too. This year is different. But that'll make me appreciate all the more if and when we can all hang out as we please. We've lost so much in so many ways. You fill in the blanks. But...

We will get by.

That's my Solstice message, bros. And now back to our regularly scheduled frenzy at WORaunchy...

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Please just release whatever is useable from that year, regardless of whether there's two minutes or two hours from one particular concert. Complete-show purists be damned! :)

I really wouldn't mind thoughtful compilations from other years, either. Hearing the best two hours culled from a three-show run that doesn't have one stand-out show is fine by me. Obviously one shouldn't cut up a start-to-finish stellar show, but how many more of those are left, if we're being completely honest with ourselves . . . ?

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In reply to by Deadheadbrewer

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Dick Latvala said he thinks the tape he played for Phil that got him the job as archivist was 10/12/68.

Like many of you I didn’t get it, especially the spider.
But when I showed it to the misses, who knows a little about Tarot, she immediately knew what was going on.
I don’t have time to explain it all, but if you look into the images and meanings of the cards and then watch again it makes more sense. The spider = is the symbol of creativity, and the fountain = the ace of cups, when you draw that card it’s supposed to represent each person and event posses a precious gem hidden inside, and to make a conscious effort to find it etc..
Just a superficial taste of this, but if you take the time to compare the video images with the cards it all makes sense.
So this is actually pretty $#@&ing deep, and meaningful and not the goofy nonsense animation some might of thought it was...
Sometimes you get shown the light, in the strangest of places.....

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In reply to by Deadheadbrewer

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I am in the camp that would welcome great music being released, even if the full show isn't available. Especially from 1968. A great box could be constructed from the years 1966-1968-maybe starting with an Acid Test and leading up to 68. The more music that could be included, the merrier it would be. A bit like an audio scrapbook of odds and ends. I'd buy it like a shot.

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In reply to by Oroborous

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Here’s the description given in the ‘This Week At Rhino’ email from yesterday.

————-
We're taking 2020 home and offering up new hope for 2021 with the video premiere of "Ripple." Beautifully animated by Actuality Films, the video brings a Tarot card reading to life as it tells the story of The Fool crossing paths with The Muse, The Magician and The Devil. Can you spot the myriad of Easter eggs drawn from Grateful Dead lyrics and lore?
————-

I don’t know anything about Tarot, don’t need to, my dog tells me what the future holds.
Sorry, but he also swears me to secrecy, so I can’t share what he tells me.

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In reply to by billy the kid

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Billy The Kid re-The Weight-Music From The Big Pink was the last thing I played last night before waking up and going to bed. They aren't really my favourite band by a long chalk, but I do check out the first two albums every once in a while. To me, more interesting rather than electrifying. Maybe time to dust off The Last Waltz, too.

Today opened with Dicks Picks 14 and 11/30/73. An unusual way to start a show, playing "Morning Dew". It works perfectly - feels a bit like reading the first chapter of a book, listening to the first few songs of this show.

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Daverock , I don't have any of the Band's music, I was just drinking beer yesterday and listening to different songs on You Tube, that song came up, I like it so I posted it. I always wondered why the Dead didn't play at the Last Waltz, at least Garcia, I always found that to be strange.

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Hadn't played in a while, dragged it out this morning.

Don't hear much talk about them here.

I used to say this is who I put on when I want people to go home :-)

The Residents - Commerical

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GarciaLive Vol. 15... 21 May 1971... just three weeks after killing it with the GD at the Fillmore East ("Ladies & Gentlemen...") Jer displays an awesome command of the guitar in a completely different musical setting. Merle handles bass duties with his left hand and I don't miss bass guitar at all. Just cerebral, loose but thoughtful jamming on a wide variety of tunes.

A cloudy winter day on the high plains brightened by sunshine issuing forth from my speakers. Oh, and a toke or two of Sativa leaning hybrid, courtesy of moi.

Cheers for the Solstice and the Jupiter/Saturn alignment!

From today’s GD email:

The Grateful Dead transformed a concrete jungle into a magical, mythical experience and our art director and producers turned that experience into a GRAMMY®-nomination for Best Boxed Set or Special Limited Edition Package. How's about that? The big one may be gone, gone, gone but you can still enjoy the music (and the fantastic art) from Giants Stadium 6/17/91 as a 5LP or 3CD set.
———-

Apparently that’s old news, but I never saw it before.

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17 years 4 months

In reply to by icecrmcnkd

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....NHL is back on the menu boys. Training camp on Jan 2nd. Season starts the 13th. No pre season games. 56 games. Divisions realigned and teams will only play within their own division. Whatever it takes. I'm in.
My Dolphins are looking good.

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13 years 11 months

In reply to by Dennis

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The Residents version of "Satisfaction" is guaranteed to clear out a room within five minutes.
I've always considered The Rez one of the two most important American rock bands.

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17 years 4 months
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Nice! Bring it on! Only in the NHL could Detroit be in the Southern Division.

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